Summary of the Judgment of 17 March 2016

Document Number
summary-judgment-17-march-2016-en
Document Type
Number (Press Release, Order, etc)
2016/2
Date of the Document
Document File

INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE
Peace Palace, Carnegieplein 2, 2517 KJ The Hague, Netherlands
Tel.: +31 (0)70 302 2323 Fax: +31 (0)70 364 9928
Website: www.icj-cij.org Twitter Account: @CIJ_ICJ

Summary
Not an official document

Summary 2016/2
17 March 2016

Question of the Delimitation of the Continental Shelf between Nicaragua and Colombia
beyond 200 nautical miles from the Nicaraguan Coast (Nicaragua v. Colombia)

Summary of the Judgment of 17 March 2016

I.NTRODUCTION

The Court recalls that in the present proceedings, Nicaragua seeks to found the Court’s
jurisdiction on Article XXXI of the Pact of Bogotá. According to this provision, the parties to the
Pact recognize the Court’s jurisdiction as compulsory in “all disputes of a juridical nature”. In

addition, Nicaragua maintains that the subject-matter of its Application remains within the
jurisdiction of the Court, as established in the case concerning the Territorial and Maritime Dispute
(Nicaragua v. Colombia), since, in its 2012 Judgment (I.C.J. Reports 2012 (II), p. 624) (hereinafter
the “2012 Judgment”), the Court did not definitively determine the question  of which it had
been seised  of the delimitation of the continental shelf between Nicaragua and Colombia in the
area beyond 200 nautical miles of the Nicaraguan coast.

The Court notes that Colombia has raised five preliminary objections to the jurisdiction of

the Court. Nicaragua requested the Court to reject Colombia’s preliminary objections in their
entirety.

Since Colombia’s second preliminary objection is concerned exclusively with the additional
basis for jurisdiction suggested by Nicaragua, the Court will address it after it has considered the
first, third and fourth objections. The fifth preliminary objection, which concerns the admissibility
of Nicaragua’s claims, will be considered last.

II.FIRST PRELIMINARY OBJECTION

In its first preliminary objection, Colombia claims that the Court lacks jurisdiction ratione
temporis under the Pact of Bogotá, because the proceedings were instituted by Nicaragua on
16 September 2013, after Colombia’s notice of denunciation of the Pact on 27 November 2012.

The Court recalls that Colombia stated in its notification that its denunciation of the Pact of
Bogotá “takes effect as of today with regard to procedures that are initiated after the present notice,
in conformity with [the] second paragraph of Article LVI”. Under that provision, the denunciation
would have no effect with respect to pending procedures initiated prior to the transmission of the
notification. The Court notes that Nicaragua’s Application was submitted to it after the

transmission of Colombia’s notification of denunciation, but before the expiry of the one-year - 2 -

period referred to in the first paragraph of Article LVI, according to which, at the end of that
period, the Pact would cease to be in force in respect of the party denouncing it, and would

continue in force for the remaining signatories.

Colombia contends that the natural implication of the express provision in the second
paragraph of Article LVI of the Pact is that denunciation is effective with regard to procedures
initiated after transmission of the notification of denunciation. It refutes the suggestion that its
interpretation of the second paragraph of Article LVI would deny effet utile to the first paragraph
of that provision. Even though Colombia accepts that its interpretation would mean that none of

the different procedures provided for in Chapters Two to Five of the Pact could be initiated by, or
against, a State which had given notification of denunciation during the year that the treaty
remained in force, in accordance with the first paragraph of Article LVI, it maintains that important
substantive obligations contained in the other Chapters of the Pact would nevertheless remain in
force during the one-year period, so that the first paragraph of Article LVI would have a clear
effect. Colombia argues that its interpretation of Article LVI is confirmed by the fact that if the
parties to the Pact had wanted to provide that denunciation would not affect any procedures

initiated during the one-year period of notice, they could easily have said so expressly, namely by
adopting a wording similar to provisions in other treaties. Finally, Colombia maintains that its
interpretation is “also consistent with the State practice of the parties to the Pact” and the travaux
préparatoires.

Nicaragua contends that the jurisdiction of the Court is determined by Article XXXI of the
Pact of Bogotá, according to which Colombia and Nicaragua had each recognized the jurisdiction
of the Court “so long as the present Treaty is in force”. How long the treaty remains in force is

determined by the first paragraph of Article LVI, which provides that the Pact remains in force for
a State which has given notification of denunciation for one year from the date of that notification.
Since the date on which the jurisdiction of the Court has to be established is that on which the
Application is filed, and since Nicaragua’s Application was filed less than one year after Colombia
gave notification of its denunciation of the Pact, it follows  in Nicaragua’s view  that the Court
has jurisdiction in the present case. Nicaragua further contends that the Colombian interpretation

would remove from the effect of the first paragraph of Article LVI all of the procedures for good
offices and mediation (Chapter Two of the Pact), investigation and conciliation (Chapter Three),
judicial settlement (Chapter Four) and arbitration (Chapter Five), which together comprise
forty-one of the sixty articles of the Pact. Of the remaining provisions, several are provisions
which have entirely served their purpose and would fulfil no function during the one-year period of
notice, while others are inextricably linked to the procedures in Chapters Two to Five and impose
no obligations independent of those procedures. Finally, Nicaragua denies that the practice of the

parties to the Pact of Bogotá or the travaux préparatoires support Colombia’s interpretation.

The Court recalls that the date at which its jurisdiction has to be established is the date on
which the application is filed with the Court. By Article XXXI, the parties to the Pact of Bogotá
recognize as compulsory the jurisdiction of the Court, “so long as the present Treaty is in force”.
The first paragraph of Article LVI provides that, following the denunciation of the Pact by a State
party, the Pact shall remain in force between the denouncing State and the other parties for a period
of one year following the notification of denunciation. In the Court’s view, it is not disputed that,

if these provisions stood alone, they would be sufficient to confer jurisdiction in the present case.
The Pact was still in force between Colombia and Nicaragua on the date that the Application was
filed and the fact that the Pact subsequently ceased to be in force between them would not affect
that jurisdiction. The only question raised by Colombia’s first preliminary objection, therefore, is
whether an a contrario interpretation can be applied to the second paragraph of Article LVI, which
states that “[t]he denunciation shall have no effect with respect to pending procedures initiated
prior to the transmission of the particular notification”, so altering what would otherwise have been

the effect of the first paragraph as to require the conclusion that the Court lacks jurisdiction in
respect of the proceedings, notwithstanding that those proceedings were instituted while the Pact
was still in force between Nicaragua and Colombia. That question has to be answered by the - 3 -

application to the relevant provisions of the Pact of Bogotá of the rules on treaty interpretation
enshrined in Articles 31 to 33 of the Vienna Convention, which reflect rules of customary

international law.

The Court observes that it is not the denunciation per se that is capable of having an effect
upon the jurisdiction of the Court under Article XXXI of the Pact, but the termination of the treaty
(as between the denouncing State and the other parties) which results from the denunciation. That
follows both from the terms of Article XXXI and from the ordinary meaning of the words used in
Article LVI. The first paragraph of Article LVI provides that the treaty may be terminated by

denunciation, but that termination will occur only after a period of one year from the notification of
denunciation. It is, therefore, this first paragraph which determines the effects of denunciation.
The second paragraph of Article LVI confirms that procedures instituted before the transmission of
the notification of denunciation can continue irrespective of the denunciation and thus that their
continuation is ensured irrespective of the provisions of the first paragraph on the effects of
denunciation as a whole.

The Court considers that Colombia’s interpretation of the second paragraph of Article LVI

runs counter to the language of Article XXXI. In the Court’s view, a different interpretation, which
is compatible with the language of Article XXXI, is that, whereas proceedings instituted before
transmission of notification of denunciation can continue in any event and are thus not subject to
the first paragraph of Article LVI, the effect of denunciation on proceedings instituted after that
date is governed by the first paragraph. Since the first paragraph provides that denunciation
terminates the treaty for the denouncing State only after a period of one year has elapsed,
proceedings instituted during that year are instituted while the Pact is still in force. They are thus

within the scope of the jurisdiction conferred by Article XXXI. The Court adds that the result of
Colombia’s proposed interpretation of the second paragraph of Article LVI would be that, during
the year following notification of denunciation, most of the Articles of the Pact, containing its most
important provisions, would not apply between the denouncing State and the other parties. Such a
result is difficult to reconcile with the express terms of the first paragraph of Article LVI, which
provides that “the present Treaty” shall remain in force during the one-year period without
distinguishing between different parts of the Pact as Colombia seeks to do. The Court notes,

moreover, that Colombia’s interpretation is inconsistent with the object and purpose of the Pact of
Bogotá, which is to further the peaceful settlement of disputes through the procedures provided for
in the Pact. Although Colombia argues that the reference to “regional . . . procedures” in the first
paragraph of Article II is not confined to the procedures set out in the Pact, Article II has to be
interpreted as a whole. It is clear from the use of the word “consequently” at the beginning of the
second paragraph of Article II that the obligation to resort to regional procedures, which the parties
“recognize” in the first paragraph, is to be given effect by employing the procedures laid down in

Chapters Two to Five of the Pact.

Finally, the Court is not persuaded by Colombia’s argument that, had the parties to the Pact
of Bogotá wished to provide that proceedings instituted at any time before the expiry of the
one-year period stipulated by the first paragraph of Article LVI would be unaffected, they could
easily have made express provision to that effect. Colombia’s argument regarding the State
practice in the form of the denunciation of the Pact by El Salvador in 1973 and Colombia itself in

2012, together with what Colombia describes as the absence of any reaction to the notification of
those denunciations, sheds no light on the question before the Court. As regards the travaux
préparatoires, they give no indication as to the precise purpose behind the addition of what became
the second paragraph of Article LVI.

For all of the foregoing reasons the Court considers that Colombia’s interpretation of
Article LVI cannot be accepted. Taking Article LVI as a whole, and in light of its context and the
object and purpose of the Pact, it concludes that Article XXXI conferring jurisdiction upon the

Court remained in force between the Parties on the date that the Application in the present case was
filed. The subsequent termination of the Pact as between Nicaragua and Colombia does not affect - 4 -

the jurisdiction which existed on the date that the proceedings were instituted. Colombia’s first
preliminary objection must therefore be rejected.

III. THIRD PRELIMINARY OBJECTION

Colombia contends in its third objection that the issues raised in Nicaragua’s Application of
16 September 2013 were “explicitly decided” by the Court in its 2012 Judgment; the Court
therefore lacks jurisdiction because Nicaragua’s claim is barred by the principle of res judicata.

The Court first observes that Colombia’s third preliminary objection has the characteristics

of an objection to admissibility, which “consists in the contention that there exists a legal reason,
even when there is jurisdiction, why the Court should decline to hear the case, or more usually, a
specific claim therein”. It will therefore deal with this objection as such.

The Court then examines the res judicata principle and its application to subparagraph 3 of
the operative clause of the 2012 Judgment, in which the Court found “that it cannot uphold the
Republic of Nicaragua’s claim contained in its final submission I (3)”. In its final submission I (3),

Nicaragua requested the Court to adjudge and declare that:

“[t]he appropriate form of delimitation, within the geographical and legal framework
constituted by the mainland coasts of Nicaragua and Colombia, is a continental shelf
boundary dividing by equal parts the overlapping entitlements to a continental shelf of
both Parties”.

The Court described this submission as a request “to define ‘a continental shelf boundary dividing

by equal parts the overlapping entitlements to a continental shelf of both Parties’”.

Colombia considers that Nicaragua’s First Request, in its Application of 16 September 2013
instituting the present proceedings, “is no more than a reincarnation of Nicaragua’s claim contained
in its final submission I (3)” of 2012, in so far as it asks the Court to declare “[t]he precise course
of the maritime boundary between Nicaragua and Colombia in the areas of the continental shelf
which appertain to each of them beyond the boundaries determined by the Court in its Judgment of

19 November 2012”. It adds that the Court, in its 2012 Judgment, decided that the claim by
Nicaragua contained in final submission I (3) was admissible, but it did not uphold it on the merits.
That fact is said to prevent the Court, by virtue of res judicata, from entertaining it in the present
case.

Colombia argues that the fate of the Second Request contained in the Application of
16 September 2013 is entirely linked to that of the first. In its Second Request, Nicaragua asks the
Court to adjudge and declare

“[t]he principles and rules of international law that determine the rights and duties of
the two States in relation to the area of overlapping continental shelf claims and the
use of its resources, pending the delimitation of the maritime boundary between them
beyond 200 nautical miles from Nicaragua’s coast”.

The Court notes that the question as to the effect of the res judicata principle relates to the
admissibility of Nicaragua’s First Request. The Second Request forms the subject, as such, of the

fifth objection by Colombia, so the Court will examine it under that heading. It holds that even if
their views converge on the elements that constitute the principle of res judicata, the Parties
disagree on the meaning of the decision adopted by the Court in subparagraph 3 of the operative
clause of its 2012 Judgment, and hence on what falls within the scope of res judicata in that
decision. - 5 -

1. The res judicata principle

The Parties agree that the principle of res judicata requires an identity between the parties
(personae), the object (petitum) and the legal ground (causa petendi). They likewise accept that
this principle is reflected in Articles 59 and 60 of the Statute of the Court.

For Colombia, there must be an identity between the parties, the object and the legal ground
in order for the principle of res judicata to apply. Colombia adds that it is not possible for the
Court, having found in the operative clause of the 2012 Judgment, which possesses the force of res
judicata, that it “cannot uphold” Nicaragua’s claim for lack of evidence, then to decide in a

subsequent judgment to uphold an identical claim.

Nicaragua considers that an identity between the personae, the petitum and the causa petendi,
though necessary for the application of the res judicata principle, is not sufficient. It is also
necessary that the question raised in a subsequent case should previously have been disposed of by
the Court finally and definitively. Consequently, Nicaragua considers that, in order to determine
whether the 2012 Judgment has the force of res judicata in respect of its First Request in the present

case, the central question is whether the Court, in that Judgment, made a decision on the
delimitation of the continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles from the Nicaraguan coast.

The Court recalls that the principle of res judicata is a general principle of law which
establishes the finality of the decision adopted in a particular case. It is not sufficient, for the
application of res judicata, to identify the case at issue, characterized by the same parties, object
and legal ground; it is also necessary to ascertain the content of the decision, the finality of which
is to be guaranteed. The Court cannot be satisfied merely by an identity between requests

successively submitted to it by the same Parties; it must determine whether and to what extent the
first claim has already been definitively settled. It notes that the decision of the Court is contained
in the operative clause of the judgment. However, in order to ascertain what is covered by res
judicata, it may be necessary to determine the meaning of the operative clause by reference to the
reasoning set out in the judgment in question. The Court is faced with such a situation in the
present case, since the Parties disagree as to the content and scope of the decision that was adopted
in subparagraph 3 of the operative clause of the 2012 Judgment.

2. The decision adopted by the Court in its Judgment
of 19 November 2012

The Parties have presented divergent readings of the decision adopted in subparagraph 3 of
the operative clause of the 2012 Judgment, and of the reasons underpinning it. They draw
opposing conclusions as to precisely what that decision covers and which issues the Court has

definitively settled.

Colombia attempts to show, in essence, that the grounds of Nicaragua’s First Request had
already been put forward in the case concerning the Territorial and Maritime Dispute (Nicaragua v.
Colombia). It further argues that, since the Court did not uphold the arguments made by Nicaragua
in its 2012 Judgment, it is barred by the effect of the res judicata principle from dealing with
Nicaragua’s Application in the present case.

Colombia contends that, in the written and oral proceedings which preceded the
2012 Judgment, Nicaragua developed arguments identical to those that it puts forward in the
present case. Relying on the Preliminary Information provided by it to the Commission on the
Limits of the Continental Shelf (hereinafter the “CLCS”), it had claimed an extended continental
shelf on the basis of Article 76 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
(hereinafter “UNCLOS”) by virtue of geological and geomorphological criteria. In Colombia’s
view, Nicaragua had not demonstrated, as it was obliged to do, that its continental margin extended - 6 -

sufficiently far to overlap with the continental shelf that Colombia was entitled to claim up to
200 nautical miles from its mainland coast. It maintains that the Court, having found Nicaragua’s

claim to be admissible, settled it on the merits in 2012 by deciding not to uphold it. According to
Colombia, that decision, whereby the Court effected a full delimitation of the maritime boundary
between the Parties, was both expressly and by necessary implication a final one. Hence, when the
Court held that it “[was] not in a position to delimit the continental shelf boundary between
Nicaragua and Colombia” (paragraph 129 of the 2012 Judgment), what it meant was that its
examination of the facts and arguments presented by Nicaragua impelled it to reject the latter’s
claim.

For its part, Nicaragua contends that the Court’s decision, in subparagraph 3 of the operative
clause of the 2012 Judgment, not to uphold its claim did not amount to a rejection of that claim on
the merits. The Court expressly refused to rule on the issue because Nicaragua had not completed
its submission to the CLCS. Nicaragua considers that, on 24 June 2013, it discharged the
procedural obligation imposed upon it under Article 76, paragraph 8, of UNCLOS to provide the
CLCS with information on the limits of its continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles, and that the

Court now has all the necessary information to carry out the delimitation and settle the dispute.

Nicaragua admits that the phrase “cannot uphold” might appear “ambiguous” from a reading
of subparagraph 3 of the operative clause alone, but it contends that such ambiguity is dispelled if
one looks at the reasoning of the decision. Moreover, Nicaragua continues, the reasoning is
inseparable from the operative clause, for which it provides the necessary underpinning, and must
be taken into account in order to determine the scope of the operative clause of the Judgment. It
follows from the reasoning of the Judgment that the operative clause takes no position on the

delimitation beyond 200 nautical miles. Nicaragua is therefore of the view that the Court is not
prevented, in the present case, from entertaining its claim relating to the delimitation of the
continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles.

The Court first notes that, although in its 2012 Judgment it declared Nicaragua’s submission
to be admissible, it did so only in response to the objection to admissibility raised by Colombia that
this submission was new and changed the subject-matter of the dispute. However, it does not

follow that the Court ruled on the merits of the claim relating to the delimitation of the continental
shelf beyond 200 nautical miles from the Nicaraguan coast.

The Court takes the view that it must now examine the content and scope of subparagraph 3
of the operative clause of the 2012 Judgment. As a result of the disagreement between the Parties
on the matter, the Court must determine the content of the decision adopted by it in response to
Nicaragua’s request for delimitation of “a continental shelf boundary dividing . . . the overlapping
entitlements . . . of both Parties”.

The Court begins by saying that it will not linger over the meaning of the phrase “cannot
uphold”, taken in isolation, in the way the Parties have done. It will examine this phrase in its
context, in order to determine the meaning of the decision not to uphold Nicaragua’s request for the
Court to delimit the continental shelf between the Parties. In particular, the Court will determine
whether subparagraph 3 of the operative clause of its 2012 Judgment must be understood as a
straightforward dismissal of Nicaragua’s request for lack of evidence, as Colombia claims, or a

refusal to rule on the request because a procedural and institutional requirement had not been
fulfilled, as Nicaragua argues. In order to do this, the Court will examine subparagraph 3 of the
operative clause of the 2012 Judgment in its context, namely by reference to the reasoning which
underpins its adoption and accordingly serves to clarify its meaning.

The Court devoted section IV of its 2012 Judgment to the “[c]onsideration of Nicaragua’s
claim for delimitation of a continental shelf extending beyond 200 nautical miles”. That section
consists of paragraphs 113 to 131 of the Judgment. - 7 -

Paragraph 113 defines the question examined by the Court as whether “it [the Court] is in a
position to determine ‘a continental shelf boundary dividing by equal parts the overlapping

entitlements to a continental shelf of both Parties’”. In paragraphs 114 to 118, the Court then
concludes that the law applicable in the case, which is between a State party to UNCLOS
(Nicaragua) and a non-party State (Colombia), is customary international law relating to the
definition of the continental shelf, as reflected in Article 76, paragraph 1, of that Convention.
Paragraphs 119 to 121 summarize Nicaragua’s arguments regarding the criteria for determining the
existence of a continental shelf and the procedural conditions, laid down in Article 76, paragraph 8,
of UNCLOS, for a State to be able to establish the outer limits of the continental shelf beyond

200 nautical miles and the steps which Nicaragua had taken to that end. Paragraphs 122 to 124 set
out Colombia’s arguments opposing Nicaragua’s request for delimitation of the continental shelf.
In paragraphs 126 and 127 respectively, the Court points out that the fact that Colombia is not a
party to UNCLOS “does not relieve Nicaragua of its obligations under Article 76 of that
Convention”, and it observes that, at the time of the 2012 Judgment, Nicaragua had only submitted
to the CLCS “Preliminary Information”, which, by its own admission, “falls short of meeting the
requirements” under paragraph 8 of Article 76 of UNCLOS.

At the close of this section of its reasoning, the Court reaches the following conclusion at
paragraph 129:

“However, since Nicaragua, in the present proceedings, has not established that
it has a continental margin that extends far enough to overlap with Colombia’s
200-nautical-mile entitlement to the continental shelf, measured from Colombia’s
mainland coast, the Court is not in a position to delimit the continental shelf boundary

between Nicaragua and Colombia, as requested by Nicaragua, even using the general
formulation proposed by it.”

The Court considers that this paragraph must be read in the light of those preceding it in the
reasoning of the 2012 Judgment. Three features of that reasoning stand out. First, although the
Parties made extensive submissions regarding the geological and geomorphological evidence of an
extension of the continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles submitted by Nicaragua, the Judgment

contains no analysis by the Court of that evidence. Secondly, the Court considered that, in view of
the limited nature of the task before it, there was no need to consider whether the provisions of
Article 76 of UNCLOS, which lay down the criteria which a State must meet if it is to establish
continental shelf limits more than 200 nautical miles from its coast, reflected customary
international law, which it had already determined was the applicable law in the case. The Court
did not, therefore, consider it necessary to decide the substantive legal standards which Nicaragua
had to meet if it was to prove vis-à-vis Colombia that it had an entitlement to a continental shelf

beyond 200 nautical miles from its coast. Thirdly, what the Court did emphasize was the
obligation on Nicaragua, as a party to UNCLOS, to submit information on the limits of the
continental shelf it claims beyond 200 nautical miles, in accordance with Article 76, paragraph 8,
of UNCLOS, to the CLCS. It is because, at the time of the 2012 Judgment, Nicaragua had not yet
submitted such information that the Court concluded, in paragraph 129, that “Nicaragua, in the
present proceedings, has not established that it has a continental margin that extends far enough to
overlap with Colombia’s 200-nautical-mile entitlement to the continental shelf, measured from

Colombia’s mainland coast”.

The Court considers that its conclusions in paragraph 129 can only be understood in the light
of those features of its reasoning. They indicate that the Court did not take a decision on whether
or not Nicaragua had an entitlement to a continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles from its coast.
The Court there speaks only of a continental margin which overlaps with the 200-nautical-mile
entitlement from the Colombian mainland. The Judgment says nothing about the maritime areas
located to the east of the line lying 200 nautical miles from the islands fringing the Nicaraguan

coast, beyond which the Court did not continue its delimitation exercise, and to the west of the line
lying 200 nautical miles from Colombia’s mainland. Yet, the Court was, as regards these areas, - 8 -

faced with competing claims by the Parties concerning the continental shelf: Nicaragua, on the one

hand, claimed an extended continental shelf in these areas, and Colombia, on the other, maintained
that it had rights in the same areas generated by the islands over which it claimed sovereignty, and
that the Court indeed declared to be under its sovereignty. It therefore follows that while the Court
decided, in subparagraph 3 of the operative clause of the 2012 Judgment, that Nicaragua’s claim
could not be upheld, it did so because the latter had yet to discharge its obligation, under
paragraph 8 of Article 76 of UNCLOS, to deposit with the CLCS the “final” information on the
limits of its continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles required by that provision and by Article 4

of Annex II of UNCLOS.

3. Application of the res judicata principle in the case

The Court has clarified the content and scope of subparagraph 3 of the operative clause of
the 2012 Judgment, taking into account the differing views expressed by the Parties on the subject.

It has found that delimitation of the continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles from the
Nicaraguan coast was conditional on the submission by Nicaragua of “final” information on the
limits of its continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles, provided for in paragraph 8 of Article 76
of UNCLOS, to the CLCS. The Court thus did not settle the question of delimitation in 2012
because it was not, at that time, in a position to do so. The Court recalls that, in its Application of
16 September 2013, Nicaragua states that on 24 June 2013 it provided the CLCS with “final”

information. The Court accordingly considers that the condition imposed by it in its
2012 Judgment in order for it to be able to examine the claim of Nicaragua contained in final
submission I (3) has been fulfilled in the present case. It concludes that it is not precluded by the
res judicata principle from ruling on the Application submitted by Nicaragua on
16 September 2013. In light of the foregoing, the Court finds that Colombia’s third preliminary
objection must be rejected.

IV. FOURTH PRELIMINARY OBJECTION

The Court observes that Colombia bases its fourth preliminary objection on the assertion
that, in its 2012 Judgment, the Court rejected Nicaragua’s request for delimitation of the
continental shelf between the Parties beyond 200 nautical miles, and fixed the boundary between
each Party’s maritime spaces. According to Colombia, that decision was “final and without

appeal” pursuant to Article 60 of the Statute, so that, through its Application of 16 September 2013,
Nicaragua was seeking to “appeal” the previous Judgment, or to have it revised.

The Court is of the view that Nicaragua does not request it to revise the 2012 Judgment, nor
does it frame its Application as an “appeal”. Accordingly, the Court finds that the fourth
preliminary objection is not founded.

V. SECOND PRELIMINARY OBJECTION

The Court notes that Colombia’s second preliminary objection concerns Nicaragua’s
argument that, independent of the applicability of Article XXXI of the Pact of Bogotá between
Colombia and Nicaragua, the Court possesses continuing jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the
Application. According to Nicaragua, this continuing jurisdiction is based on the Court’s
jurisdiction in the case concerning the Territorial and Maritime Dispute (Nicaragua v. Colombia),

given that the Court, in its 2012 Judgment, did not definitively determine the question of the
delimitation of the continental shelf between Nicaragua and Colombia in the area beyond
200 nautical miles from the Nicaraguan coast. - 9 -

Colombia denies that any such continuing jurisdiction exists in the present case. In
Colombia’s view, unless the Court expressly reserves its jurisdiction, which it did not do in the

2012 Judgment, there is no basis on which the Court can exercise continuing jurisdiction once it
has delivered its judgment on the merits. According to Colombia, the Statute provides only two
procedures by which the Court can act, without an independent basis of jurisdiction, in respect of
matters which have previously been the subject of a judgment of the Court in a case between the
same parties: requests under Article 60 of the Statute for interpretation of the earlier judgment and
requests under Article 61 for revision of the earlier judgment. Since the present case falls within
neither Article 60, nor Article 61, Colombia contends that the Court lacks jurisdiction on the

additional basis advanced by Nicaragua.

Nicaragua rejects Colombia’s analysis. According to Nicaragua, the Court has an obligation
to exercise to the full its jurisdiction in any case properly submitted to it. The Court declined, in its
2012 Judgment, to exercise its jurisdiction in respect of the part of Nicaragua’s case that is the
subject of the current proceedings for reasons which, according to Nicaragua, no longer appertain.
Nicaragua maintains that the Court must now exercise the jurisdiction which it possessed at the

time of the 2012 Judgment. Accordingly, Nicaragua argues that the Court possesses continuing
jurisdiction over the issues raised by its present Application, irrespective of whether it expressly
reserved that jurisdiction in its earlier judgment. Nicaragua maintains that this basis of jurisdiction
is additional to the jurisdiction conferred by Article XXXI of the Pact of Bogotá.

The Court recalls that it has already held that Article XXXI confers jurisdiction upon it in
respect of the present proceedings since Nicaragua’s Application was filed before the Pact of
Bogotá ceased to be in force between Nicaragua and Colombia. It is therefore unnecessary to

consider whether an additional basis of jurisdiction exists. Consequently, there is no ground for the
Court to rule upon the second preliminary objection raised by Colombia.

VI. F IFTH PRELIMINARY OBJECTION

The Court observes that Colombia contends, in the alternative, on the hypothesis that the
four other objections raised by it were to be rejected, that neither of the two requests put forward in

Nicaragua’s Application is admissible. Colombia considers that the First Request is inadmissible
due to the fact that Nicaragua has not secured the requisite recommendation on the establishment of
the outer limits of its continental shelf from the CLCS, and that the Second Request is inadmissible
because, if it were to be granted, the decision of the Court would be inapplicable and would
concern a non-existent dispute.

1. The preliminary objection to the admissibility

of Nicaragua’s First Request

In its First Request, Nicaragua asks the Court to determine “[t]he precise course of the
maritime boundary between Nicaragua and Colombia in the areas of the continental shelf which
appertain to each of them beyond the boundaries determined by the Court in its Judgment of
19 November 2012”. Colombia maintains that “the [Court] cannot consider the Application by
Nicaragua because the CLCS has not ascertained that the conditions for determining the extension
of the outer edge of Nicaragua’s continental shelf beyond the 200-nautical-mile line are satisfied

and, consequently, has not made a recommendation”.

Nicaragua responds that a coastal State has inherent rights over the continental shelf, which
exist ipso facto and ab initio, and that its own rights over its continental shelf vest in it
automatically, ipso jure, by operation of law. Furthermore, the CLCS is concerned only with the
precise location of the outer limits of the continental shelf; it does not grant or recognize the rights
of a coastal State over its shelf and is not empowered to delimit boundaries in the shelf. Nicaragua - 10 -

adds that, in the event of a dispute over its extended continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles,
the CLCS, in accordance with its own rules and established practice, would not address a

recommendation to Nicaragua. And if the Court were to refuse to act because the CLCS had not
issued such a recommendation, the result would be an impasse.

The Court has already established that Nicaragua was under an obligation, pursuant to
paragraph 8 of Article 76 of UNCLOS, to submit information on the limits of the continental shelf
it claims beyond 200 nautical miles to the CLCS. The Court held, in its 2012 Judgment, that
Nicaragua had to submit such information as a prerequisite for the delimitation of the continental

shelf beyond 200 nautical miles by the Court. The Court must now determine whether a
recommendation made by the CLCS is a prerequisite in order for the Court to be able to entertain
the Application filed by Nicaragua in 2013.

The Court notes that Nicaragua, as a State party to UNCLOS, is under an obligation to
communicate to the CLCS the information on the limits of its continental shelf beyond
200 nautical miles, whereas the making of a recommendation, following examination of that
information, is a prerogative of the CLCS. When the CLCS addresses its recommendations on

questions concerning the outer limits of its continental shelf to coastal States, those States establish,
on that basis, limits which are “final and binding” upon the States parties to that instrument.

The Court observes that the procedure before the CLCS relates to the delineation of the outer
limits of the continental shelf, and hence to the determination of the extent of the sea-bed under
national jurisdiction. It is distinct from the delimitation of the continental shelf, which is governed
by Article 83 of UNCLOS and effected by agreement between the States concerned, or by recourse

to dispute resolution procedures.

The Court accordingly considers that, since the delimitation of the continental shelf beyond
200 nautical miles can be undertaken independently of a recommendation from the CLCS, the
latter is not a prerequisite that needs to be satisfied by a State party to UNCLOS before it can ask
the Court to settle a dispute with another State over such a delimitation. The Court finds that the
preliminary objection to the admissibility of Nicaragua’s First Request must be rejected.

2. The preliminary objection to the admissibility
of Nicaragua’s Second Request

In its Second Request, Nicaragua asks the Court to determine

“[t]he principles and rules of international law that determine the rights and duties of
the two States in relation to the area of overlapping continental shelf claims and the

use of its resources, pending the delimitation of the maritime boundary between them
beyond 200 nautical miles from Nicaragua’s coast”.

Colombia contends that Nicaragua’s Second Request invites the Court to make a ruling
pending its decision on the First Request, and that, since the Court would have to rule on both
requests simultaneously, it could not accept the Second Request, because it would be without
object. Colombia is also of the view that Nicaragua’s Second Request is a disguised request for
provisional measures and that it should therefore be dismissed. Finally, Colombia argues that there

is no dispute between the Parties concerning a hypothetical legal régime to be applied pending the
decision on the maritime boundary beyond 200 nautical miles of Nicaragua’s coast.

Nicaragua considers that the relevance of the Second Request depends on the Court’s
decision on the merits in respect of the question of the delimitation of the continental shelf beyond
200 nautical miles from Nicaragua’s coast between the Parties. Nicaragua disagrees with
Colombia that its Second Request is a disguised request for provisional measures. It asserts that - 11 -

there is indeed a dispute between the Parties, since Colombia denies that Nicaragua has any legal

rights  or even any claims  beyond 200 nautical miles from its coast.

The Court notes that, in its Second Request, Nicaragua invites it to determine the principles
and rules of international law governing a situation that will be clarified and settled only at the
merits stage of the case. However, it is not for the Court to determine the applicable law with

regard to a hypothetical situation. It recalls that its function is “to state the law, but it may
pronounce judgment only in connection with concrete cases where there exists at the time of the
adjudication an actual controversy involving a conflict of legal interests between the parties”. This
is not the case, at this stage of the proceedings, in respect of Nicaragua’s Second Request. This
Request does not relate to an actual dispute between the Parties, that is, “a disagreement on a point
of law or fact, a conflict of legal views or of interests between two persons”, nor does it specify

what exactly the Court is being asked to decide. Accordingly, the Court finds that the preliminary
objection to the admissibility of Nicaragua’s Second Request must be upheld.

VI. OPERATIVE PART

T HE COURT ,

(1) (a) Unanimously,

Rejects the first preliminary objection raised by the Republic of Colombia;

(b) By eight votes to eight, by the President’s casting vote,

Rejects the third preliminary objection raised by the Republic of Colombia;

IN FAVOUR : President Abraham; Judges Owada, Tomka, Bennouna, Greenwood,
Sebutinde, Gevorgian; Judge ad hoc Skotnikov;

AGAINST : Vice-President Yusuf; Judges Cançado Trindade, Xue, Donoghue, Gaja,
Bhandari, Robinson; Judge ad hoc Brower;

(c) Unanimously,

Rejects the fourth preliminary objection raised by the Republic of Colombia;

(d) Unanimously,

Finds that there is no ground to rule upon the second preliminary objection raised by the
Republic of Colombia;

(e) By eleven votes to five,

Rejects the fifth preliminary objection raised by the Republic of Colombia in so far as it

concerns the First Request put forward by Nicaragua in its Application;

IN FAVOUR : President Abraham; Judges Owada, Tomka, Bennouna, Greenwood,
Donoghue, Gaja, Sebutinde, Gevorgian; Judges ad hoc Brower, Skotnikov;

AGAINST : Vice-President Yusuf; Judges Cançado Trindade, Xue, Bhandari, Robinson;

(f) Unanimously, - 12 -

Upholds the fifth preliminary objection raised by the Republic of Colombia in so far as it
concerns the Second Request put forward by Nicaragua in its Application;

(2) (a) Unanimously,

Finds that it has jurisdiction, on the basis of Article XXXI of the Pact of Bogotá, to
entertain the First Request put forward by the Republic of Nicaragua;

(b) By eight votes to eight, by the President’s casting vote,

Finds that the First Request put forward by the Republic of Nicaragua in its Application
is admissible.

IN FAVOUR : President Abraham; Judges Owada, Tomka, Bennouna, Greenwood,

Sebutinde, Gevorgian; Judge ad hoc Skotnikov;

AGAINST : Vice-President Yusuf; Judges Cançado Trindade, Xue, Donoghue, Gaja,
Bhandari, Robinson; Judge ad hoc Brower.

Vice-President USUF , Judges CANÇADO T RINDADE , XUE, GAJA , BHANDARI , ROBINSON

and Judge ad hoc BROWER append a joint dissenting opinion to the Judgment of the Court;
Judges OWADA and G REENWOOD append separate opinions to the Judgment of the Court;
Judge DONOGHUE appends a dissenting opinion to the Judgment of the Court; Judges GAJA,
BHANDARI , ROBINSON and Judge ad hoc BROWER append declarations to the Judgment of the

Court.

________ Annex to Summary 2016/2

Joint dissenting opinion of Vice-President Yusuf, Judges Cançado Trindade, Xue, Gaja,
Bhandari, Robinson and Judge ad hoc Brower

Introduction

1. The seven judges who authored the joint dissenting opinion regret that the Court was
evenly split regarding the content and scope of a decision that was unanimously adopted by the
Court only four years ago. They are of the view that Colombia’s objection based on the principle

of res judicata should have been upheld and Nicaragua’s Application dismissed as inadmissible,
being barred by the principle of res judicata.

The principle of res judicata in the jurisprudence of the Court and its application to the
present case

2. The joint dissenting opinion outlines its authors’ understanding of res judicata. This

conception views res judicata as a general principle, which is reflected in Articles 59 and 60 of the
Statute of the Court, according to which “the decisions of the Court are not only binding on the
parties, but are final, in the sense that they cannot be reopened by the parties as regards the issues
that have been determined”. It is a principle which acts as a bar to a subsequent claim if there is
identity of parties, identity of cause and identity of object with a previous claim that has been
adjudicated upon.

3. The seven judges are, however, aware of the fact that although the Parties agree on these
elements, they disagree on what the Court finally decided in its 2012 Judgment in the Territorial
and Maritime Dispute case (Nicaragua v. Colombia). They are of the view that this is to be found
in the dispositif of the Judgment, which is endowed with res judicata, as well as the elements of the
Court’s reasoning that are “inseparable” from the operative clause of a judgment or which
constitute a “condition essential to the Court’s decision”.

The dispositif of the 2012 Territorial and Maritime Dispute Judgment

4. The joint dissenting opinion recalls that the Court stated in the dispositif of the
2012 Judgment: “The Court . . . [f]inds that it cannot uphold the Republic of Nicaragua’s claim
contained in its final submission I (3)” (I.C.J. Reports 2012 (II), p. 719, para. 251 (3)). Nicaragua
had requested the Court to adjudge and declare that “[t]he appropriate form of delimitation, within
the geographical and legal framework constituted by the mainland coasts of Nicaragua and

Colombia, is a continental shelf boundary dividing by equal parts the overlapping entitlements to a
continental shelf of both Parties” (ibid., p. 636, para. 17).

5. The joint dissenting opinion, after having surveyed judgments of the Court in which the
phrase “cannot uphold” was used, concludes that the Court has consistently used that phrase to
reject the submission or request of a party. Thus, its authors are of the view that the Court rejected
Nicaragua’s final submission I (3) in 2012. Consequently, since the Court rejected this submission

in the operative paragraph of the Judgment, it took a decision to which res judicata attaches.

6. In the present case, Nicaragua’s first request to the Court is to adjudge and declare “[t]he
precise course of the maritime boundary between Nicaragua and Colombia in the areas of the
continental shelf which appertain to each of them beyond the boundaries determined by the Court - 2 -

in its Judgment of 19 November 2012” (Application of Nicaragua, hereinafter “AN”, para. 12).
Paragraph 11 of Nicaragua’s Application states that Nicaragua’s claimed extended continental shelf

“includes an area beyond Nicaragua’s 200-nautical-mile maritime zone and in part overlaps with
the area that lies within 200 nautical miles of Colombia’s coast” (AN, para. 11 (c)), and that this
entitlement to an extended continental shelf exists under both customary international law and the
provisions of UNCLOS (AN, para. 11 (a)).

7. The seven judges are of the opinion that the final submission I (3) of Nicaragua in the
Territorial and Maritime Dispute case and the first request in Nicaragua’s Application in the

present case have both the same object (the delimitation of an extended continental shelf
entitlement that overlaps with Colombia’s 200-nautical-mile entitlement, measured from the
latter’s mainland coast), the same legal ground (that such an entitlement exists as a matter of
customary international law and under UNCLOS), and involve the same Parties. Nicaragua is
therefore attempting to bring the same claim against the same Party on the same legal grounds. As
the joint dissenting opinion’s survey of the Court’s use of the phrase “cannot uphold”
demonstrates, the Court rejected Nicaragua’s final submission I (3) in the 2012 Judgment.

Nicaragua’s first request in the present Application is thus an exemplary case of a claim precluded
by res judicata.

The reasoning of the Court in the 2012 Territorial and Maritime Dispute Judgment

8. The seven judges of the joint dissenting opinion regret that the majority does not examine
the use of the phrase “cannot uphold” and thus does not give effect to the words contained in the

dispositif of the 2012 Judgment. The approach of the majority is based on an examination of the
reasoning of the Court in that Judgment, instead of its dispositif. However, the seven judges
maintain that even that reasoning supports the view that the Court rejected Nicaragua’s claim in
2012 because it failed to establish the existence of an extended continental shelf that overlaps with
Colombia’s 200-nautical-mile entitlement, measured from the latter’s coast.

9. The language used by the Court in paragraph 129 of the 2012 Judgment makes clear that

the Court rejected Nicaragua’s claim because it had “not established that it has a continental margin
that extends far enough to overlap with Colombia’s 200-nautical-mile entitlement” (emphasis
added) (in the French text: “le Nicaragua n’ayant pas . . . apporté la preuve que sa marge . . .”).

10. This conclusion is also supported by the Court’s rejection of Nicaragua’s proposed
“general formulation” in the 2012 Judgment, according to which it requested the Court delimit the
overlapping continental shelf entitlements in general terms, such as “the boundary is the median

line between the outer edge of Nicaragua’s continental shelf fixed in accordance with UNCLOS
Article 76 and the outer limit of Colombia’s 200-mile zone” (I.C.J. Reports 2012 (II), p. 669,
para. 128). The Court found that “even using the general formulation proposed” by Nicaragua
(ibid., p. 669, para. 129; emphasis added), it was not in a position to effect a delimitation between
the Parties. The only reason that the Court had to recall and reject the “general formulation” as
distinct from Nicaragua’s final submission I (3) was that the former claim relied solely on the
existence of an extended continental shelf that overlapped with Colombia’s 200-nautical-mile

entitlement, and not on the delineation of its outer limits.

11. Thus the Court’s rejection of Nicaragua’s request was not, as contended by the majority,
based on the failure of Nicaragua to deposit information with the CLCS pursuant to Article 76 (8)
of UNCLOS. Indeed, even Nicaragua itself in oral proceedings in the present case admitted that
the Court decided in 2012 that Nicaragua had not established the existence of an extended - 3 -

continental shelf that overlapped with Colombia’s 200-nautical-mile entitlement, measured from
the latter’s coastline.

12. Moreover, contrary to the conclusion of the majority, the Court never indicated that there
was a procedural requirement incumbent on Nicaragua to submit information to the CLCS before
the Court could proceed with delimitation, nor did the Court suggest that Nicaragua would be able
to return to the Court once it had made its submission to the CLCS.

13. The seven judges must therefore conclude that the failure of Nicaragua to prove the

existence of an extended continental shelf that overlaps with Colombia’s 200-nautical-mile
entitlement constituted the very basis of the decision adopted by the Court in 2012 concerning
delimitation. This is a major element of the Court’s reasoning which laid the foundation for the
operative clause to which res judicata attaches.

14. Nicaragua’s second request in the present case asks the Court to adjudge and declare

“[t]he principles and rules of international law that determine the rights and duties of the two States
in relation to the area of overlapping continental shelf claims and the use of its resources, pending
the delimitation of the maritime boundary between them beyond 200 nautical miles from
Nicaragua’s coast” (AN, para. 12). This is a reformulation of the “general formulation” proposed
to the Court by Nicaragua in the Territorial and Maritime Dispute proceedings. As with
Nicaragua’s first request in the present case, the second request is barred by res judicata.

The incoherence of the procedural requirement introduced by the majority

15. The majority has read a procedural requirement into the 2012 Judgment according to
which a coastal State is obliged to submit information to the CLCS under Article 76 (8) of
UNCLOS as a prerequisite for the delimitation of extended continental shelf entitlements between
Nicaragua and Colombia. It therefore frames submission of information to the CLCS under
Article 76 (8) as a condition of admissibility; in other words, as a “contention that there exists a
legal reason, even when there is jurisdiction, why the Court should decline to hear the case, or more

usually, a specific claim therein” (Application of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment
of the Crime of Genocide (Croatia v. Serbia), Preliminary Objections, Judgment,
I.C.J. Reports 2008, p. 456, para. 120).

16. However, in the 2012 Judgment, the question of admissibility of Nicaragua’s final
submission I (3) was expressly raised by Colombia, which argued that the request to delimit an
extended continental shelf was neither implicit in the Application of Nicaragua nor was it an issue

that arose directly out of the subject-matter of the dispute (I.C.J. Reports 2012 (II), p. 664,
para. 107). The Court rejected Colombia’s objection, and declared Nicaragua’s final
submission I (3) admissible.

17. The majority’s line of reasoning in the present case thus leaves the Court in a strange
position. If one accepts the view of the majority in the current case, the Court should not, in the
2012 proceedings, have accepted Nicaragua’s I (3) submission as admissible and should not have

proceeded to address the claim on the merits. On the other hand, if one accepts  as the Court did
in 2012  that Nicaragua’s I (3) submission was admissible, then logic dictates that a submission
to the CLCS under Article 76 (8) of UNCLOS cannot be a prerequisite to adjudicate upon a request
for delimitation of the extended continental shelf. - 4 -

18. Not only is the majority’s position inconsistent with the 2012 Judgment, but it is also
inconsistent with the text of Article 76 (8) of UNCLOS. This provision may be divided into three

limbs, each with the imperative shall in the English version of the Convention: information shall
be submitted by the coastal State; the Commission shall make recommendations; and the limits
established upon the basis of CLCS recommendations shall be final and binding. It is unclear why
the majority considers that the first limb of this Article constitutes a prerequisite to delimitation
whereas the other two limbs do not; clearly, there is no textual support for such a reading.

The purposes of submission of information under Article 76 of UNCLOS and Article 4 of its

Annex II

19. Under the provisions of UNCLOS, there are two purposes for submitting information to
the CLCS. The first purpose of submitting information to the CLCS, under paragraph 76 (8), is to
obtain recommendations from the CLCS regarding the outer limits of the continental shelf, should
a coastal State wish to do so. Such recommendations shall then be used as the basis for delineation
of the continental shelf and the resulting determination shall be opposable to other States.

20. The second purpose is to allow States that intend to claim an extended continental shelf
to comply with the “sunset clause” under Article 4 of Annex II of UNCLOS, which requires States
to submit “particulars” of prospective continental shelf claims to the CLCS within ten years of the
entry into force of the Convention for that State.

21. By virtue of the Decision of States Parties to UNCLOS of 20 June 2008 (SPLOS/183),

States may submit “preliminary information” to the CLCS as a means of complying with their
obligation under Article 4 of Annex II. This was a means of allowing States, in particular
developing ones, which may lack the necessary technical capabilities, the possibility of complying
with the “sunset clause” for claiming an extended continental shelf under UNCLOS, whilst
providing them with the extra time required to complete the requisite geological and
geomorphological surveys to prove the existence of an extended continental shelf. The majority is
wrong to conflate the purposes served by these two different provisions of the UNCLOS.

Ne bis in idem and the exhaustion of treaty processes

22. The seven judges of the joint dissenting opinion argue that, even if one were to accept the
majority’s interpretation of the 2012 Judgment, Nicaragua should not now be able to come before
the Court for a second time to attempt to remedy the procedural flaw which supposedly precluded
the Court from delimiting its allegedly overlapping extended continental shelf entitlement in 2012.

Allowing such an action would violate the principle of ne bis in idem, according to which a repeat
claim is inadmissible whether or not the issue is covered by the principle of res judicata.

23. Moreover, the renewed presentation of a claim previously examined by the Court may be
considered inadmissible if that claim relies on the same treaty process as the basis of jurisdiction of
the Court. Nicaragua’s Application in the present case is thus barred as a result of the exhaustion
of treaty processes.

Conclusion: the authority of res judicata and the protection
of the judicial function

24. The seven judges conclude their joint dissenting opinion by highlighting the importance
of protecting the finality of judgments of the Court, both for the efficient operation of the - 5 -

inter-State dispute settlement system and the protection of respondent States from repeat litigation.
In their view, a scenario in which the purposes of res judicata are no longer served undermines the

judicial function as well as the sound administration of justice.

25. Nicaragua and Colombia have been embroiled in a long-running dispute for many years
regarding their respective maritime entitlements. As the principal judicial organ of the
United Nations, the Court is well placed to settle such disputes. But if it is to continue to be
regarded as such, it cannot afford to be seen to allow States to bring the same disputes over and
over again. Such a scenario would undercut the certainty, stability, and finality that judgments of

this Court should provide.

Separate opinion of Judge Owada

1. Judge Owada has appended a separate opinion to discuss two separate points. The first
point relates to the issue of res judicata, which was raised by Colombia in its third preliminary
objection. Judge Owada concurs with the decision of the Court that Nicaragua’s claim of an

extended continental shelf and request for delimitation was not decided by the Court in the
2012 Judgment, but has appended a separate opinion to clarify his own reasoning on the issue of
res judicata. The prerequisite for the application of the principle of res judicata, namely the identity
of persona, petitum, and causa petendi, has not been raised by the Parties and is not at issue,
however, the more intrinsically important issue in the present case is whether the decision reached
in the 2012 Judgment contains a final and definitive determination by the Court to which the effect
of res judicata should attach. In other words, the issue relates to the scope of the res judicata. In

order to determine whether the claim of Nicaragua was finally and definitely determined in the
2012 Judgment, one must examine the context in which the operative part of the 2012 Judgment
was developed, as well as the reasoning of the Court and the overall structure of the Judgment. An
examination of these factors, which were not adequately addressed in the Judgment of the Court,
leads to the conclusion that Nicaragua’s request for delimitation on the basis of its claim of an
extended continental shelf was not finally and definitively determined in the 2012 Judgment and
therefore does not fall within the scope of res judicata. As a result, the third preliminary objection

of Colombia should be rejected.

2. The second point concerns the opposability of UNCLOS by Colombia, a non-party, to
Nicaragua, a party. As Judge Owada concurs with the reasoning of the Judgment in rejecting the
fifth preliminary objection, this issue is only raised as a matter of principle because it pertains to
the applicable law. It is well established that a treaty does not create obligations or rights for a
third State without its consent, or res inter alios acta. As such, as affirmed by the 2012 Judgment,

the applicable law in this dispute is not UNCLOS — which Colombia has not ratified — but is
instead customary international law. Colombia has not established that the relevant provision of
Article 76 of UNCLOS concerning the requirement of recommendations by the CLCS is a rule of
customary international law, yet Colombia still attempts to invoke this obligation against
Nicaragua, a party to UNCLOS. While Judge Owada concurs with the reasoning of the Court in
rejecting the fifth preliminary objection, it thus appears as though there is an additional reason to
reject this objection.

Separate opinion of Judge Greenwood

Res judicata has substantive, not merely procedural, effects. If, as Colombia maintains, the
2012 Judgment decided that Nicaragua had failed to prove that it had a continental margin which
extended beyond 200 nautical miles from its baselines, that decision would have been res judicata
and would have precluded Nicaragua from asserting a legal entitlement to an outer continental shelf - 6 -

vis-à-vis Colombia not only in these proceedings but in any forum. However, the 2012 Judgment
did not decide that. Since the Judgment said nothing at all about Nicaragua’s claims in respect of

the area more than 200 nautical miles from Colombia’s mainland coast and more than 200 nautical
miles from Nicaragua’s mainland coast, no question of res judicata could arise in respect of that
area. Even in respect of the area within 200 nautical miles of the Colombian mainland coast, a
study of the 2012 Judgment shows that the Court did not decide what Nicaragua had to prove, nor
does the Judgment disclose any analysis by the Court of the strengths and weaknesses of the
evidence adduced by Nicaragua. In these circumstances, the Judgment cannot be regarded as a
ruling that Nicaragua had failed to discharge its burden of proof. Nevertheless, since the arguments

in respect of res judicata in relation to the two areas differ, it would have been preferable for the
Court to have dealt with them separately in the present Judgment.

Dissenting opinion of Judge Donoghue

Judge Donoghue does not agree with the Court’s interpretation of dispositive
subparagraph (3) of the Judgment in Territorial and Maritime Dispute (Nicaragua v. Colombia)

(I.C.J. Reports 2012 (II), p. 719, para. 251 (3)). As a consequence, she disagrees with the
conclusion that the Court reaches today as to Colombia’s third preliminary objection, pursuant to
which Colombia asserted that the doctrine of res judicata rendered the present Application
inadmissible.

The Court today states that it decided in 2012 that Nicaragua’s delimitation claim could not
be upheld because Nicaragua had not yet made a submission to the Commission on the Limits of
the Continental Shelf with respect to the limits of its continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles.

Because Nicaragua has now made such a submission, the Court concludes that the doctrine of
res judicata does not preclude it from ruling on Nicaragua’s first request in the present case.

According to Judge Donoghue, however, the Court in 2012 took a decision on the merits of
Nicaragua’s claim. In particular, it determined that Nicaragua had failed to prove that its
continental shelf entitlement extended far enough to overlap with the entitlement generated by
Colombia’s mainland and thus was not in a position to delimit as requested by Nicaragua. This

determination was essential to the Court’s decision that it could not uphold Nicaragua’s claim. She
therefore considers that the doctrine of res judicata denies Nicaragua the opportunity to prove the
same facts for a second time in a second case against the same respondent, and that Nicaragua’s
first request is inadmissible to that extent.

However, Judge Donoghue notes that the 2012 Judgment did not address the question of the
existence of an overlap between Nicaragua’s entitlement and the entitlement generated by
Colombia’s islands in the area located beyond 200 nautical miles from Nicaragua’s coast. The

doctrine of res judicata does not apply to this matter and Nicaragua’s first request is admissible to
that extent.

Finally, Judge Donoghue states the reasons why she disagrees with the Court’s interpretation
of dispositive subparagraph (3) of the 2012 Judgment.

Declaration of Judge Gaja

Delimiting the continental shelf between States with opposite or adjacent coasts is often
difficult in the absence of the delineation of the outer limits of an extended continental shelf,
which, under Article 76, paragraph 8, of UNCLOS, has to be effected on the basis of a
recommendation of the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf. Under Article 76,
paragraph 10, of UNCLOS a recommendation concerning the establishment of the outer limits of
the continental shelf does not prejudice the question of delimitation and may therefore be adopted - 7 -

irrespective of the existence of a dispute on delimitation. The Commission should modify its Rules
of Procedure and consider submissions also when the delimitation is under dispute.

Declaration of Judge Bhandari

In his declaration Judge Bhandari recalls that he has joined the dissenting opinion that deals
with Colombia’s third preliminary objection on the issue of res judicata. The purpose of the
present declaration is to provide some additional comments on the fifth preliminary objection
dealing with the failure of Nicaragua to obtain a binding recommendation from the Commission on

the Limits of the Continental Shelf (“CLCS”). In concluding that he would uphold Colombia’s
fifth preliminary objection, Judge Bhandari makes eight brief points. Firstly, there is no proof on
record that Nicaragua has furnished all relevant information to the CLCS, which seems to be the
premise of the conclusion of the majority on this issue. Secondly, since the CLCS has not yet
issued a recommendation, the Court is not in a position to speculate when the CLCS might do so.
Thirdly, the principle of interinstitutional comity requires deference to the CLCS. Fourthly, the
CLCS is a specialized body with experts who have practical experience, tasked with making

binding recommendations on continental shelf matters. Fifthly, to allow this case to proceed to the
merits phase without waiting for a recommendation by the CLCS goes against the reasoning
provided in the 2012 Judgment. Sixthly, as Nicaragua is a signatory of the United Nations
Convention on the Law of the Sea (“UNCLOS”) it is bound by its provisions. Seventhly, a nation
should not be allowed to pursue a de facto appeal or review of a judgment that is final and binding
between the parties in violation of the Statute of the Court. Lastly, allowing Nicaragua to approach
this Court without a binding recommendation from the CLCS would render that body without any

true authority.

Declaration of Judge Robinson

I have signed the joint dissent because, for the reasons set out therein, I am of the opinion
that Colombia’s third preliminary objection should be upheld. I write this declaration to elaborate
further upon a particular concern that arises from today’s Judgment, in which the majority
embraces and applies dicta contained within the 2012 Judgment in such a way as to override an

elementary principle of the Law of Treaties.

Treaties are binding on States because they have so consented. This consent is an expression
of the principles of sovereignty and equality between States. The obligations and rights under a
treaty do not apply to non-States parties unless either the States parties intend this to be the case
and the non-States parties consent, or the relevant provisions also form part of customary
international law. These principles seem to have been overlooked in the majority’s conclusion

today.

The Court stated quite directly in paragraph 118 of the 2012 Judgment that the applicable
law in the case was customary international law, as Colombia was not a State party to UNCLOS.
Article 76 (8) of UNCLOS and the procedure of the CLCS set out in Annex 2 are obviously
special, contractual and confined to States parties to UNCLOS.

The majority reads the 2012 Judgment as imposing a “prerequisite” or a “condition”,

pursuant to Article 76 (8) of UNCLOS, for the delimitation of extended continental shelf
entitlements between Nicaragua and Colombia. In paragraphs 86 and 87 of today’s Judgment, the
majority finds that, as “Nicaragua states that on 24 June 2013 it provided the CLCS with ‘final’
information”, the majority “accordingly considers that the condition imposed by it in its
2012 Judgment in order for it to be able to examine the claim of Nicaragua contained in the final
submission I (3) has been fulfilled in the present case”. - 8 -

The disjointed logic of this interpretation is fully discussed in the joint dissent. Further, the
result of the majority’s interpretation is the application of law that is, in fact, inapplicable between

the two Parties. Colombia, a non-State party, has consequently been accorded something that, in
my view, is akin to a benefit under UNCLOS, since Article 76 (8) of UNCLOS, which does not
mirror a rule of customary international law, has been enforced against Nicaragua in its relations
with Colombia. This raises questions about the compatibility of the Court’s approach with the
régime envisaged by Articles 34 to 36 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (Treaties
and Third States).

Declaration of Judge ad hoc Brower

In his declaration, Judge ad hoc Brower agrees with all of the other Members of the Court in
concluding that, on balance, the Court does have jurisdiction over Nicaragua’s Application under
the Pact of Bogotá. He has issued a declaration to explain the difficulties the Court necessarily has
had in accepting Colombia’s interpretation of the second paragraph of Article LVI of the Pact,
particularly given the absence of useful guidance from any travaux préparatoires.

Judge ad hoc Brower notes that Nicaragua’s counsel conceded in the oral proceedings that
the second paragraph of Article LVI of the Pact is “superfluous, but . . . not ineffective”.
Nicaragua’s alternative to acceptance of Colombia’s interpretation of that paragraph is that it has
no meaning whatsoever other than to make clear out of an abundance of caution what in any event
would be true. The Court has agreed with Nicaragua, even though it is generally driven to attribute
a meaning to each and every provision of a treaty, as required by the principle of effet utile.

Judge ad hoc Brower observes that Articles LVIII and LIX of the Pact, put alongside the
entirety of Article LVI, could collectively reflect an intention of the parties to the Pact that once the
Pact would be denounced by a party, then no new proceedings could be commenced. It could also
be argued that the second paragraph of Article LVI had the effet utile of making clear what had not
yet been definitively established by Nottebohm ((Liechtenstein v. Guatemala), Preliminary
Objection, Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1953, p. 111), that the Court’s jurisdiction attaches upon the
submission of an application and endures thereafter irrespective of the subsequent termination of

the instrument on which such jurisdiction was based. The Court has not found any of this
persuasive because of the complete absence of any indication in the very limited travaux
préparatoires as to why that second paragraph was included.

All the Court could derive from the drafting history was that the same language was retained
throughout various relevant conferences and versions of the Pact as it progressed to its conclusion.
Nowhere is there any record indicating why what became the second paragraph of the Pact’s
Article LVI was introduced and repeatedly accepted over the course of ten years. It clearly is due

to the absence of any such guidance that the Court has felt constrained to prefer the interpretation
of the paragraph in question as having the, albeit superfluous, effet utile of an abundance of caution
to the rather more difficult a contrario inference.

Judge ad hoc Brower finds that the Court’s conclusion is not unreasonable and therefore he
has found himself unable to dissent from it.

___________

Document file FR
Document Long Title

Summary of the Judgment of 17 March 2016

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